Tag: Ike Uche

  • Match-fixing scandal: Ike Uche is prime suspect -media report

    Match-fixing scandal: Ike Uche is prime suspect -media report

    Nigeria striker Ike Uche has been fingered in a match-fixing scandal, according to Spanish newspaper El Mundo.

    Uche’s club then Real Zaragoza beat Levante 2-1 on the final day of the 2010/11 season to avoid relegation, while Levante and Deportivo La Coruna were demoted as a result.

    Atletico Madrid captain Gabi, who scored Zaragoza’s two goals on that fateful day, confessed to a judge yesterday that he was aware the match was fixed.

    “I just did what the club asked me to do,” the 29-year-old midfielder simply said in court, according to El Mundo.

    It is suspected that Levante players were paid to lose the match.

    And the spotlight of this trial has fallen on Agapito Iglesias, the then owner of Zaragoza, Leonardo Ponzio, Leo Franco and Uche, according to El Mundo.

    The prosecutor wants to question at least 20 players in this match-fixing trial.

  • Ike Uche scores, injured again

    Ike Uche scores, injured again

    Out of favour Super Eagles striker, Ikechukwu Uche scored but suffered an injury setback on his return to Spanish La Liga side Villarreal as they held Borussia Monchengladbach to a 1-1 draw in their 2014/15 UEFA Europa League Group A opener at the Borussia Park in Germany last night.

    Monchengladbach, two-time UEFA Cup winners, went into the break with a 1-0 advantage following Patrick Herrmann’s 21st-minute strike before the Nigeria international, who came in as a second-half substitute, rescued a point for the Yellow Submarines in the 68th minute when he steered Manu Trigueros’ pass into the net with his first touch of the match.

    Uche had just recovered from a muscle strain he sustained during Villarreal’s 2-0 away victory over Levante on 24th August 2014. The injury forced him out of the club’s UEFA Europa League home and away matches against Astana, League game against Barcelona, club friendly against Celtic and he also failed to recover for last weekend’s La Liga match against Granada.

    The former Real Zaragoza striker, who could be described as a super substitution, scored with what proved to be his only touch of the contest, before being stretchered off due to a clash with onrushing Monchengladbach goalkeeper, Yann Sommer.

    Uche received treatment to try to continue, but the Villarreal goalscorer was led down the tunnel by the club’s physios. He was later replaced by Jonathan Dos Santos.

    This latest injury will no doubt be a setback for the 30-year-old who is eyeing a return to the Super Eagles.

  • Barcelona vs Villarreal: Ike Uche targets personal record

    Barcelona vs Villarreal: Ike Uche targets personal record

    Ikechukwu Uche continued his rich vein of form in the Spanish La Liga, finding the back of the net as Villarreal defeated Levante 2-0 in the first round of games held on Sunday.

    It is worthy of note that the attacker’s 56th minute strike at the Estadio Ciudad de Valencia was the first time ever he has hit target on the opening day of the season since his La Liga debut in the colours of Recreativo Huelva.

    Also, the Nigeria international has netted in each of his last three topflight games, matching his best scoring streak in the league which he set last season.

    Should Ikechukwu Uche score this coming weekend against Barcelona, he will set a personal record of notching in four games on the bounce.

    Uche was the top goalscorer for Villarreal last term with 14 strikes in 30 matches.

    He has not dressed for the National Team since the 2013 African Cup of Nations, tasting action for 53 minutes in the final match against Burkina Faso to be specific.

    The former Getafe and Recreativo Huelva ace is not one of the 23 players invited by Stephen Keshi to for the African Cup of Nations qualifiers against Congo and South Africa next month.

  • Ike Uche scores third pre-season goal

    Ike Uche scores third pre-season goal

    Thirty-year-oldIkechukwu Uche continued his great form in pre – season after he netted in the first half as Villarreal defeated Sassuolo 4-2 in a tune-up game on Thursday evening.

    The Nigeria international forward opened scoring for the Yellow Submarine in the 16th minute after an assist from Mexican Giovani Dos Santos.

    Espinosa, Vietto and Gerard Moreno were also on target for the Spanish team while the Italians managed to reduce the scoreline through Simone Missiroli and Simone Zaza.

    The exhibition game was the final of the 15th edition of Trofeo de la Cerámica Mahou Cinco Estrellas,which Villarreal won for the fifth consecutive time.

    Ike Uche also found the back of the net against Swansea City and Reus Deportiu, meaning he has scored in three of the five pre-season games played by Villarreal.

    The Camp El Madrigal outfit are away to FK Lokomotiv Astana on August 21 in the Europa League, three days before their meeting with Levante in the La Liga.

  • World Cup: Eagles won’t miss Uche, Obasi – Nwosu

    World Cup: Eagles won’t miss Uche, Obasi – Nwosu

    Former Green Eagles skipper, Henry Nwosu, has insisted that Super Eagles will not miss the services of Ikechukwu Uche and Chinedu Obasi at the 2014 FIFA World Cup starting next month in Brazil.

    Uche and Obasi were excluded from coach Stephen Keshi’s 30-man provisional World Cup list released on Tuesday evening.

    In a chat with Goal, Nwosu who is Gateway United’s head coach is confident that players invited by Keshi will defy all odds to make the nation proud.

    “We have a very good squad and with this, we are sure of doing well at the World Cup because we have our star players there,” Nwosu told Goal.

    “It is now left for those whose inclusion has steered controversy to prove their worth before the world.

    “The absence of the likes of Uche and Ideye [Brown] will definitely not be a minus as long as those invited prove their mettle. But if the reverse is the case, then people would naturally feel their absence.

    “Obasi wouldn’t have made any difference if invited because he is just returning from injury. I know him too well and he is a good and determined player but unfortunately he is not in his best form.

    “In the real sense, he wouldn’t have made the squad because it will be very difficult for Keshi to drop his regular players for him.

    “IK Uche on his own part has got scores to settle with Keshi and his crew because reports have it that he does not feel too good any time he comes in from the bench which makes him not to give his best . This kind of attitude is not good for the success of the team,” Nwosu told Goal.

  • BROTHERS AT WAR! IKE UCHE TACKLES IGIEBOR TODAY

    BROTHERS AT WAR! IKE UCHE TACKLES IGIEBOR TODAY

    By Uchenna Ajah

    Super Eagles duo, Ike Uche and Nosa Igiebor are expected to be on parade today when Villarreal play host to Real Betis in a La Liga cracker at El Madrigal.

    Uche who recently returned for injury will be looking forward to increasing his 12 goals haul to help the Yellow Submarine’s charge for European football at the end of the campaign.

    On the other hand, Igiebor who missed Real Betis 2-0 Europa League win against Russia’s Rubin Kazan on Thursday will be staging a comeback to the starting 11 after a slight injury setback.

    Speaking ahead of today’s tie, Igiebor’s coach at Betis, Gabriel Calderon said Igiebor and pals may find the Thursday-Sunday turnaround tough.

    “We’re trying to recover,” he told a Press conference. “We haven’t had much time since coming back from Russia, but we’re doing our best.

    “It’s complicated for us though. We have seven injured and two players suspended. But regardless of what happened on Thursday, we’re coming up against a tough team.

    “Every game for us is tough. Villarreal are doing well, but we’re looking for a win.

    “Over the last three games we’ve been superb. We’re it not for the referees, we could have got three wins.

    “But we’ve played well and we’re looking a lot better.”

    Meanwhile, Ike Uche’s coach at Villarreal, Gabriel Calderon feels different as he refuses to underestimate the Andalusian side, saying: “I am not complacent at all about Betis, I mistrust them more than any other team”.

    “The fact they haven’t won a lot of games doesn’t mean they cannot win games or that they have a bad team,” he said.

    “They showed that in Kazan and against (Athletic) Bilbao, in a match that they didn’t win, but that doesn’t mean they didn’t do enough to deserve to win (Betis lost 2-0).

    “Therefore, they will be difficult opponents for many reasons. They are on a bad run and have suffered, but they’ve got a lot of quality and good players, and that’s why we have to be careful and make sure we’re at our best.”

     

  • Ike Uche’s fate

    Ike Uche’s fate

    I didn’t want to dignify Stephen Keshi with a reply to his insistence of not having Ike Uche in Nigeria’s 2014 World Cup squad. As the Super Eagles chief coach, he rules on such matters. But I changed my mind to tell Keshi some home truth.

    It seems to me that Keshi doesn’t want to continue with this job after the World Cup. His actions and body language suggest so. Should we then fold our hands and watch while he drops capable players for Lilliputians? Is it wrong to ask Keshi to parade our best players, no matter what he thinks about them? Should we accept Keshi’s usual “we are rebuilding” cliché after another catastrophic World Cup outing in Brazil? Shouldn’t we call Keshi to order now? Who will get Keshi to pick Ike Uche, Nigeria’s best striker in Europe?

    Keshi, a central defender, doesn’t know good strikers. The Big Boss doesn’t believe in flair players, hence the Eagles lack creative midfielders, who can drive its attacking onslaught by dribbling through the pack under tight situations, like Austin Okocha, Nwankwo Kanu et al did in the past.

    Therefore, players who can dribble the ball to create openings for free mates to jab into the net had better forget about going to the 2014 World Cup. Little wonder Olaitan who shone like a million stars against Manchester United FC in the UEFA Champions League isn’t considered good enough to play for the Eagles. Olaitan has been marvelous for Olympiakos FC of Greece this season. Keshi’s idea of playing four men in the midfield rests with asking the wingers (Ahmed Musa, Sunday Mba, Brown Ideye and Nnamdi Oduamadi) to combine the role of going upfront and recovering to the midfield when the Eagles lose the ball. I digress!

    What those who think that Keshi should be allowed to wield the axe on eminently qualified players on grounds not known to football, is that the coach shouldn’t tell us in post-match conferences at the World Cup that his attackers disappointed him.

    We all saw how Real Marid FC of Spain’s manager Carlo Ancelotti paraded Ronaldo, Benzema and Bale upfront against Schalke 04, which was playing at home in one of the UEFA Champions league matches on Wednesday. Ancelotti knew that that the trio were hot. He played them to scare the Germans, knowing also that any defensive network in the world won’t dare join their team’s attacking onslaught against a team that has Ronaldo, Benzema and Bale. Guess what, the trio scored a brace each in Real Madrid’s 6-1 whiplash of Schalke. Talk about managers who know their onions. Can our coaches take such risks based on the players’ form? I digress!

    Nigeria is in a very tricky group where we are the third rated team terms of ranking on FIFA’s table. It is easy for cynics to dismiss FIFA’s rankings. Yet, the truth remains that the Brazil 2014 World Cup will be an event where strikers will wreak havoc on weak defences. Any country desirous of doing well at the Mundial must have strikers who can attract markers because of their pedigree in Europe. These strikers must have the capacity to score from half chances and clear opportunities. Any country going with strikers with the poor goal-ratio of Eagles’ current attacking force will only play the three mandatory matches and return home.

    Keshi has said so many things about Ike Uche. But his recent comment that he isn’t tactically disciplined explains why many have described his feat with the Super Eagles totter during matches. Keshi alleged that Ike Uche lacks discipline. Pundits sneezed at such a trait in Uche, citing his relationship with other managers in the Eagles before Keshi took charge.

    It appears that this new submission is a reaction to his earlier one and it is laughable. In one breath, Keshi said that Uche lacks team discipline, citing matches where the Eagles were totally poor in their execution of Keshi’s match plans for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations held in South Africa.

    No one has told Keshi that Eagles were poor in Nigeria’s first three matches at AFCON. And it is rather surprising that Keshi, who admitted that his team was one in transition, could blame Uche for our poor outing in matches at the Africa Cup of Nations. Keshi must tell us the truth about his relationship with Uche beyond these double-speak. It is gratifying that Uche has chosen not to smack Keshi in the international media as Osaze Odemwingie did. But Keshi must keep quiet on Uche’s invitation, rather than be the laughing stock with such statements as the ones ascribed to him on Tuesday. “Ikechukwu Uche is not a player I have not seen play. Ike Uche’s problem is not knowing how to play football. His problem is that he wants to dictate how we play in Super Eagles. He wants to tell us the system we’re playing is not good,” says Keshi, adding: “Uche has a very bad habit, that if you put him in the game, he is not playing to instructions and he did that in the final of AFCON against Burkina Faso. He almost cost us. Again, he did that against Zambia in the second match when (Efe) Ambrose was given a red card. What we told him to do, he was doing the opposite.”

    Keshi went on:”And if you don’t respect your team mates and you don’t respect the team, then there is no point. I know he cannot do that in his club; then why do it in the national team? I don’t think I need a player like that in the team.”

    Haba Keshi. Uche has been introduced into Eagles’ games and scored goals for the team. Ask Samson Siasia, Shuaibu Amodu, Lars Lagerback and Austin Eguavoen. Close watchers of football knew that Uche wasn’t match fit for AFCON, having just recovered from an injury that kept him out of the game for close to two years. That Uche played for Nigeria in South Africa casts doubt over the parametres used in picking him by the coach. Keshi, only a bad workman grumbles with his tools.

    Uche’s mercurial form in the La Liga with 12 goals, ranks him at 11th among 20 top European scorers, comprising Cristiano Ronaldo and Lionel Messi. This underscores why he must be picked for the World Cup against the background that Eagles strikers have been tottering with their European clubs; this should worry Keshi.

    We need to remind Keshi that Uche isn’t a first timer in the Eagles. Besides, members of the squad haven’t changed significantly for Uche not to respect his mates. Haba Big Boss! Who are the newcomers in the Eagles that Uche will treat with disdain? Keshi should tell us the real reasons for dropping Uche. We have seen strikers dictate the pace with which their teams play. Ronaldo, Messi, Suarez, Aguero, Higuain, Rooney, Adebayor et al have been given free roles by the European managers. This ploy is meant to exploit the players’ finer qualities as strikers. It amounts to pettiness for Keshi to blame Uche for Nigeria’s poor outing against Zambia. In which area did the Eagles distinguish themselves in the Chipolopolo tie? Keshi needs re-watch the game on television. His initial judgment may have arisen from the tension that enveloped that match.

    It will be a travesty of fairness if Uche doesn’t make Nigeria’s World Cup squad, given the way he is banging in goals in one of the elite leagues in Europe. Eagles’ coaches want to be Emperors, treating players as mere servants. Who were these coaches when they played for Nigeria? Didn’t their era mark the reign of the mafia? Need I waste space listing all their atrocities, including holding the country hostage to satisfy their personal gains?

    Uche isn’t perturbed with Keshi’s pranks. He is giving his all to Villarreal FC in Spain, knowing that the coaches are fair in their dealings with players. I’m sure if Keshi was Uche’s coach in Spain, he would have sacked him on grounds that he was nursing an injury. Keshi, like the Igbo will say, Madabuchi (man is not God).

    Take heart, Aisha Falode

    Monday was a bad day. Having finished that day’s television show at Silverbird in Lekki with Jide Alabi, I opted to visit Mike Itemuagbor at home.

    He didn’t allow me to sit before asking if I had seen Aisha Falode. I said “no.” He invited me to the breakfast table and said we would be going to see Aisha after food. I looked forward to seeing Aisha. Getting to the house where Aisha was, I wished she wasn’t at home. But there she was, staggering towards us. Certainly, she wasn’t drunk. Her groggy movement captured what she had gone through since her son, Oloruntoba Oluwadamilola Falode, died on February 15.

    Aisha’s eyes were sunk – no thanks to many days of crying. I liked what Itemuagbor told Aisha, when we opened, the big poster of the late Toba.

    Apparently, Aisha hadn’t seen it. But once the beautiful picture became evident, she cried again. Itemuagbor to consoled her with a hug. Once Aisha was seated, Itemuagbor said: “Look Aisha, it clearly hurts that Toba is gone, not because we won’t see him again, but the fact that we can no longer touch him physically. Your son has gone home to rest. Do not feel bad but thank God that he is resting in peace.”

    Itemuagbor’s sermon worked, but not before Aisha had asked God, why such calamity befell her. Don’t ask me what I did? I disappointed Itemuagbor – he told me later – by crying. Toba was like my son. We related very well. It was just unfair that such a meek child could be murdered.

    What could Toba have done to warrant his being thrown down from the 17th floor of a high-rise building in Dubai?

    Well, Toba’s body will be buried in Lagos, on Monday. Good night Oloruntoba Oluwadamilola Falode.

  • Keshi to recall Haruna, Ike Uche

    Keshi to recall Haruna, Ike Uche

    Lukman Haruna and Ikechukwu Uche are to be recalled to the Super Eagles ahead of the World Cup in Brazil, officials have said.

    And both players could well get their chance as early as next month’s pre-World Cup friendly against Mexico in United States.

    Dynamo Kiev midfielder Haruna has been superb for his Ukrainian club after a recent injury setback, while Villarreal striker Uche has scored 12 goals in La Liga.

    However, it is left to be seen whether a hamstring injury suffered by Uche last week may not stop him from the Mexico match.

    Haruna last played for Nigeria at the 2010 World Cup in South Africa, while Uche has not been involved with the national team since the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations also in South Africa.

    MTNFootball.com also gathered that several other players who were not part of the qualifiers for Brazil 2014, but have been doing well at their various clubs in Europe will also be considered by Stephen Keshi.

    “My team will be open to any Nigerian player who is doing well,” maintained Keshi.

    The Eagles will resume training camp by the end of the month ahead of the friendly against Mexico on March 5.

     

  • Ike Uche scores goal No. 12

    Ike Uche scores goal No. 12

    • Shot Villarreal to fourth position 

    Out-of-favour Super Eagles striker, Ikechukwu Uche makes case for his national team recall when he scored his twelve goals of the season in his team’s Villarreal 2-0 victory over struggling Almeria on Sunday.

    Uche, who last played for Nigeria at the Africa Cup of Nation in South Africa in 2013, scored the opening goal in the third minute with Bruno Soriano making sure of the win with a late penalty after Jonathan Pereira was brought down by Rafita.

    Villarreal got the match off to the perfect start for the home fans when they claimed an early lead thanks to Uche.

    The Nigeria international fired home with just over two and a half minutes on the clock from within the six-yard box after he got onto the end of Giovani dos Santos’ ball from the right.

    After the dream start, Villarreal struggled to create many more chances, with Almeria also lacking any real creativity up front.

    Soriano blazed a shot over the bar before Almeria’s Marcos Tebar had a shot blocked by Villarreal goalkeeper Sergio Asenjo before Alex Vidal was denied by Mateo Musacchio.

    After the break, Marco Torsiglieri had a chance blocked by Villarreal midfielder Javier Aquino and the second half looked set to yield no more goals until Soriano’s penalty three minutes before the final whistle killed off the game and give the home side the points.

    The result means Villarreal moved to fourth place in the Primera Division standings and leapfrogged Athletic Bilbao into the Champions League qualifying spot, although the Biscay club are yet to play this weekend and will host Real Valladolid on Monday.

  • Can Keshi continue to ignore Ike Uche?

    Can Keshi continue to ignore Ike Uche?

    The players who travelled to South Africa in early 2013 to compete for Nigeria at the Cup of Nations largely fell into two categories. There were those who starred for the Super Eagles, the players who brought the trophy home, who proved themselves, who thrived under Stephen Keshi’s leadership and who have etched their name into national folklore. However, as prevalent as those success stories might be, there is, remarkably, a large dichotomy between the fortunes of the various squad members.

    For every revelation, for every Sunday Mba, there is a Nosa Igiebor. For every starlet who emerged from the shadows to play a major role, there is another whose showing was highly-anticipated, but who flopped and floundered on the high stage.

    It is amazing that such a successful squad contained two such differing contingents; those who were made by the AFCON and those who were broken by it.

    Five of the AFCON squad have not been called up since the tournament. It’s not that they haven’t played; they haven’t even been invited to return to the fold. The likes of Nwankwo Obiorah, Ejike Uzoenyi, Juwon Oshaniwa, Joseph Yobo and Ike Uche must surely be questioning whether their winner’s medal will be their last evidence of participation with the national team.

    But for Keshi’s unswerving confidence in his abilities, it might have been a similar story for Nosa Igiebor. It is a rare thing, certainly, that the members of such a successful side have enjoyed such differing fortunes since their career-defining journey together.

    One of the hardest hit, at least in an international context, is Ike Uche. Before the tournament, I highlighted the Villarreal man as a potential Golden Boot winner.

    “On his day” I wrote, for another publication, Uche can “score against any opposition, and with support from the likes of Ahmed Musa and [Victor] Moses, could score a hatful against some of the tournament’s weaker defences in Group C.”

    How wrong I was!

    Uche failed to progress on his fine form from the second half of 2012. Having scored four international goals between June & October he hit a brick wall at the AFCON. He began the tournament on the bench, entering the fray to little effect in the opening games against Burkina Faso and Zambia.

    Against Ethiopia, in the Super Eagles’ final group game, he started the match as Ideye Brown and Ahmed Musa were relegated to the bench. He was unable to influence proceedings and was withdrawn, cutting a fairly beleaguered figure in the process.

    In the famous Quarter-final victory over Cote d’Ivoire and the magnificent Semi-final demolition of Mali, he was an unused substitute, watching on as Victor Moses, Ideye Brown and Emmanuel Emenike provided the Nigerian attacking threat. When Keshi did require an impact substitute, he didn’t turn to Uche, but to Ahmed Musa.

    The Spain-based forward watched on as Sunday Mba changed the face of a continent—witnessing the glory that he must have hoped would be his.

    Following Emenike’s injury, Uche was recalled to the starting line-up for the final against Burkina Faso, preferred to Musa, who retained his substitute role.

    This match was an immediate opportunity for Uche to seal redemption. Had he made an impact, of any kind, scored a goal or made an assist, he could have retained his eminence among the Super Eagles forwards.

    He couldn’t.

    His movement off the ball was admirable, but generally, Uche was wholly unable to impose himself upon the fixture. It should have been the game of his life…he was replaced by Musa after 53 minutes, leaving the likes of Mba and Moses to steal the limelight.

    Opportunities like this don’t come around very often. To let such a big match pass you by might be regrettable, but to let such a major tournament, as part of such an exceptional generation, come and go, without leaving a trace, is almost unforgivable.

    Keshi certainly didn’t appear in any mood to sweep Uche’s anonymous performances under the carpet and later criticised the forward for being a divisive influence. He was dropped for the first post-AFCON clash, a World Cup qualifier against Kenya, and hasn’t been seen since.

    Tellingly, he wasn’t even invited back for the Confederations Cup in Brazil during the summer. This tournament was an occasion for Keshi to reintegrate those who had previously failed him or to trial new faces ahead of the World Cup twelve months later.

    He chose to do the latter.

    Uche was overlooked as the likes of Joseph Akpala, Anthony Ujah and even Mohammed Gambo (the cursed collection) were given a chance to show what they could do in the famous green of Nigeria. None of that trio has been recalled to the squad since their ill-fated sojourn to Brazil, and none should be anticipating an invitation to the main event next summer.

    But should Uche?

    Even after the failings of that threesome last summer, Keshi has turned elsewhere before recalling the Villarreal man.

    Victor Obinna has made a case for inclusion and is a more versatile player than Uche. Bright Dike and Shola Ameobi looked good in the recent friendly against Italy and offer something different to the forward line. Even Obafemi Martins has been given a look-in since Uche last pulled on a Nigeria shirt.

    But few Nigerians, few strikers, can claim to be in as scintillating form as the discarded centre-forward.

    At the time of writing, Ike Uche is the joint-fourth top scorer in La Liga. He has scored eleven goals in only ten starts for newly-promoted Villarreal, becoming one of the side’s key men in the process. He is also in the league’s top ten most fouled players; clearly his movement has been causing extensive problems for opposition defences, forcing them to resort to the dark arts in order to stop him.

    Despite being in the country’s second tier only last season, a combination of Uche’s goals and Giovanni dos Santos’s fine forward play have hoisted the Yellow Submarine into the European qualification places.

    Can Keshi ignore the 30-year-old for much longer?

    While the AFCON may have been an unfortunate aberration, it’s important to remember that Uche’s scoring rate for the national side is impressive.

    He has found the net 18 times in 44 appearances and currently sits joint-fourth in the national all-time scoring charts. His goals-per-games ratio is considerably better than the likes of Peter Osaze Odemwingie, Kanu, Yakubu Aiyegbeni or, pertinently, Victor Obinna.

    Keshi’s issue in the past has clearly been the striker’s attitude and his commitment to the cause (or lack of it); if Uche can prove that he is willing to work for his moment in the sun, or if desperation and fear overcome Keshi, then one of the Super Eagles’ finest finishers might be set for a swansong in Brazil.